On Mon, 5 Apr 2010 15:57:25 -0700, UFO wrote:
> hello,
>
> i have a vista home premium 32bit on a laptop, which randomly gets problems:
> 1.sometimes , the theme becomes from black to gray , yet the themes service
> seems to work (on the services window) . when restarting the service, it
> becomes black again.
> 2.sometimes , the language toolbar becomes floating instead of staying on
> the system tray . sometimes it just disappears, and sometimes it cannot
> switch to my second language.
> 3.from some reason, some programs that ran before cannot run anymore . an
> example of such a program would be crystal player (free/pro edition) .
> 4.sometimes IE8 freezes and doesn't even allow me to close the frozen tab.
> 5.sometimes, the WIFI connection disconnects, and then it keeps failing
> re-connecting till i do an OS-restart.
>
> since i have all of those problems, i wish to know if i can fix them, or
> maybe if i can re-install the OS (or just the SP) itself so that it might fix
> them.
>
> the laptop is HP Compaq presario F700US.everything is updated ,original,and
> legal. sadly , the computer didn't have the OEM disk of vista. instead, HP
> told me they have it inside a hidden partition (D) . however, i wish to know
> if re-installing the OS would delete some important documents and other stuff
> that I've had over time.
>
> please help me.
>
> btw, i still do not get notified by email by this forum, even though i check
> to notify me.
To answer one very important question: yes, using the recovery partition
(D

will delete all of the work you have done. All of your data files,
documents, and installed software will be gone.
If you decide do that, you should first download and install a program such
as Macrium backup free edition and use it to make an image of your whole C:
drive on an external hard drive. Also, make a bootable CD of that program
so you can use it to update your system. However, if you have malware, as
Dave-UK suggests, you would not want to restore that image, since you would
also restore the malware.
The above is a last resort, obviously. You should definitely do the backup
anyway, since you might be seeing the beginnings of hardware failure, but
Dave-UK's suggestion of using malware bytes software is a good place to
start.
BTW, if you can see the D: partition, I would not consider it to be
hidden...
--
Gene E. Bloch letters0x40blochg0x2Ecom